IRC was created in 1988. Client software is available for every major operating system that supports Internet access. As of April 2011, the top 100 IRC networks served more than half a million users at a time, with hundreds of thousands of channels operating on a total of roughly 1,500 servers out of roughly 3,200 servers worldwide.

IRC was created by Jarkko Oikarinen in August 1988 to replace a program called MUT (MultiUser Talk) on a BBS called OuluBox in Finland. Oikarinen found inspiration in a chat system known as Bitnet Relay, which operated on the BITNET.

Hey, thanks for watching! If you enjoyed the video, give it a like! While you're at it, leave some feedback in the comments section. I always appreciate it.
Terms you may want to know:
IRC - Internet Relay Chat. Internet Relay Chat is a simple text messaging protocol which allows for clients to interact with other clients through a chat server. IRC was mainly designed for group communication across different channels (channels can be thought of as "chat rooms" or "forums"). However, IRC can also be used for private communication between two clients.
IRC Botnet - This refers to a network of bots (or zombies) controlled through the usage of

1:15

How to Use IRC Scripts

How to Use IRC Scripts

How to Use IRC Scripts

Scripts are very useful when chatting in IRC, but definitely not something that is common knowledge for beginners in IRC. In this tutorial, you'll learn how ...

10:19

jIRCii - The Ultimate IRC Client for MacOS X, Windows, and Linux

jIRCii - The Ultimate IRC Client for MacOS X, Windows, and Linux

jIRCii - The Ultimate IRC Client for MacOS X, Windows, and Linux

This video demonstrates the flexibility of the jIRCii internet relay chat client. jIRCii is a GUI client with a console client feel. If you're a fan of Bitch...

13:19

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 1: Setting Up and a Basic Response

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 1: Setting Up and a Basic Response

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 1: Setting Up and a Basic Response

In this tutorial, we go over how to download and set up your mIRC client as well as the basic script blocks.
Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial
Chat Host: www.mibbit.com

14:40

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 2: Making Basic Commands

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 2: Making Basic Commands

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 2: Making Basic Commands

In this tutorial, we go over how to make basic commands with the triggers. Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial Chat Host: www.mibbit.com.

5:05

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 3: Directing Commands

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 3: Directing Commands

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 3: Directing Commands

In this tutorial, we go over how to let users direct commands at other users.. Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial Chat Host: www.mibbit.com.

8:39

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 4: Variables

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 4: Variables

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 4: Variables

In this tutorial, we go over what variables are and how to use them. Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial Chat Host: www.mibbit.com.

13:17

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 5: Making a Caculator

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 5: Making a Caculator

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 5: Making a Caculator

In this tutorial, we go over how to make a caculator using irc scripting. Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial Chat Host: www.mibbit.com.

18:29

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 6: If The Else Statements

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 6: If The Else Statements

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 6: If The Else Statements

In this tutorial, we go over how to use if/then/else statements.
Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial
Chat Host: www.mibbit.com
List Of If Operators: http://www.zigwap.com/mirc/if_then_else.php

5:53

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 8: Aliases

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 8: Aliases

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 8: Aliases

In this tutorial, we go over how to use an alias.
Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial
Chat Host: www.mibbit.com

1:53

New [First] Dicing Method ~ IRC

New [First] Dicing Method ~ IRC

New [First] Dicing Method ~ IRC

MUST READ~~~ Jagex has removed dice bags from RuneScape, so we are now rolling the dice on a text based communication network called IRC (Internet Relay C...

Hey, thanks for watching! If you enjoyed the video, give it a like! While you're at it, leave some feedback in the comments section. I always appreciate it.
Terms you may want to know:
IRC - Internet Relay Chat. Internet Relay Chat is a simple text messaging protocol which allows for clients to interact with other clients through a chat server. IRC was mainly designed for group communication across different channels (channels can be thought of as "chat rooms" or "forums"). However, IRC can also be used for private communication between two clients.
IRC Botnet - This refers to a network of bots (or zombies) controlled through the usage of

1:15

How to Use IRC Scripts

How to Use IRC Scripts

How to Use IRC Scripts

Scripts are very useful when chatting in IRC, but definitely not something that is common knowledge for beginners in IRC. In this tutorial, you'll learn how ...

10:19

jIRCii - The Ultimate IRC Client for MacOS X, Windows, and Linux

jIRCii - The Ultimate IRC Client for MacOS X, Windows, and Linux

jIRCii - The Ultimate IRC Client for MacOS X, Windows, and Linux

This video demonstrates the flexibility of the jIRCii internet relay chat client. jIRCii is a GUI client with a console client feel. If you're a fan of Bitch...

13:19

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 1: Setting Up and a Basic Response

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 1: Setting Up and a Basic Response

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 1: Setting Up and a Basic Response

In this tutorial, we go over how to download and set up your mIRC client as well as the basic script blocks.
Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial
Chat Host: www.mibbit.com

14:40

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 2: Making Basic Commands

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 2: Making Basic Commands

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 2: Making Basic Commands

In this tutorial, we go over how to make basic commands with the triggers. Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial Chat Host: www.mibbit.com.

5:05

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 3: Directing Commands

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 3: Directing Commands

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 3: Directing Commands

In this tutorial, we go over how to let users direct commands at other users.. Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial Chat Host: www.mibbit.com.

8:39

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 4: Variables

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 4: Variables

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 4: Variables

In this tutorial, we go over what variables are and how to use them. Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial Chat Host: www.mibbit.com.

13:17

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 5: Making a Caculator

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 5: Making a Caculator

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 5: Making a Caculator

In this tutorial, we go over how to make a caculator using irc scripting. Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial Chat Host: www.mibbit.com.

18:29

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 6: If The Else Statements

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 6: If The Else Statements

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 6: If The Else Statements

In this tutorial, we go over how to use if/then/else statements.
Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial
Chat Host: www.mibbit.com
List Of If Operators: http://www.zigwap.com/mirc/if_then_else.php

5:53

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 8: Aliases

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 8: Aliases

IRC Scripting Tutorial EP 8: Aliases

In this tutorial, we go over how to use an alias.
Chat Room: #Saxon_Tutorial
Chat Host: www.mibbit.com

1:53

New [First] Dicing Method ~ IRC

New [First] Dicing Method ~ IRC

New [First] Dicing Method ~ IRC

MUST READ~~~ Jagex has removed dice bags from RuneScape, so we are now rolling the dice on a text based communication network called IRC (Internet Relay C...

tutorial scripting irc basico 1 (script de kick y kickban)

como dar ban y kick ban con un script

1:04

mIRC 7.14 Free Download with keygen !

mIRC 7.14 Free Download with keygen !

mIRC 7.14 Free Download with keygen !

WARNING FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY!!!
ONCE AGAIN FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY!!!
mIRC v7.14
mIRC is a popular Internet Relay Chat client used by millions of people and thousands of organizations to communicate share play and work with each other on IRC networks around the world. Serving the Internet community for over a decade mIRC has evolved into a powerful reliable and fun piece of technology.
Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
More Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
4dobe Products Free Full Download
link : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh

7:22

mIRC internet relay chat how to download and get started

mIRC internet relay chat how to download and get started

mIRC internet relay chat how to download and get started

here is a tutorial on where to download mIRC and how to add the frostwire server and how to connect to a server. next tutorial how to color your text here is...

5:38

IRC Client Showdown : XChat2, HydraIRC, IceChat

IRC Client Showdown : XChat2, HydraIRC, IceChat

IRC Client Showdown : XChat2, HydraIRC, IceChat

Overall this was a pretty even match, considering all the following. But the final verdict was that IceChat was for people that like lots of scripts/plugins,...

Top Ten Tools For Teams

How to Herd Cats! Here’s Ten Tools to Keep Your Team on The Same Page. I’m John P. Geek Beat starts NOW!
Today we’re focusing on a common problem for tech and start-up geeks: namely people working on the same project from different locations. How do you keep em on track and on task? Here are ten tools that should do the trick:
Let’s start with an obvious choice:
Google Apps for Work. For $5 a person each month (or $50 for the year) you get an entire suite of tools that literally keeps your people and projects in sync through the cloud: We’re talking Gmail, Google Calendar, Docs, Sheets, Forms and Slides - to name a few (and at Geekbeat we

1:03

DDoS Threat | ItsZoomii | Talking Trash About Botnets

DDoS Threat | ItsZoomii | Talking Trash About Botnets

DDoS Threat | ItsZoomii | Talking Trash About Botnets

A botnet is a collection of Internet-connected programs communicating with other similar programs in order to perform tasks. This can be as mundane as keeping control of an Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel, or it could be used to send spam email or participate in distributed denial-of-service attacks. The word botnet is a combination of the words robot and network. The term is usually used with a negative or malicious connotation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botnet
sleash TheSleash BoracTuba EX TheSleash on Xbox Live
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheSleash
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/1000068457000

Hey, thanks for watching! If you enjoyed the video, give it a like! While you're at it, leave some feedback in the comments section. I always appreciate it.
Terms you may want to know:
IRC - Internet Relay Chat. Internet Relay Chat is a simple text messaging protocol which allows for clients to interact with other clients through a chat server. IRC was mainly designed for group communication across different channels (channels can be thought of as "chat rooms" or "forums"). However, IRC can also be used for private communication between two clients.
IRC Botnet - This refers to a network of bots (or zombies) controlled through the usage of the IRC protocol. The IRC protocol provides a simple and effective interface to command bots in groups, or individually.
Mbps - Megabits per second. This is a unit of data transfer in computer systems. The skid in the video was attempting to use this term in order to refer to the rate at which he'd be sending data to my network during a DoS attack. However, he didn't know what the actual term was nor did he know what it means.

Hey, thanks for watching! If you enjoyed the video, give it a like! While you're at it, leave some feedback in the comments section. I always appreciate it.
Terms you may want to know:
IRC - Internet Relay Chat. Internet Relay Chat is a simple text messaging protocol which allows for clients to interact with other clients through a chat server. IRC was mainly designed for group communication across different channels (channels can be thought of as "chat rooms" or "forums"). However, IRC can also be used for private communication between two clients.
IRC Botnet - This refers to a network of bots (or zombies) controlled through the usage of the IRC protocol. The IRC protocol provides a simple and effective interface to command bots in groups, or individually.
Mbps - Megabits per second. This is a unit of data transfer in computer systems. The skid in the video was attempting to use this term in order to refer to the rate at which he'd be sending data to my network during a DoS attack. However, he didn't know what the actual term was nor did he know what it means.

WARNING FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY!!!
ONCE AGAIN FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY!!!
mIRC v7.14
mIRC is a popular Internet Relay Chat client used by millions of people and thousands of organizations to communicate share play and work with each other on IRC networks around the world. Serving the Internet community for over a decade mIRC has evolved into a powerful reliable and fun piece of technology.
Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
More Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
4dobe Products Free Full Download
link : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
mIRC is a full featured Internet Relay Chat client for Windows that can be used to communicate share play or work with others on IRC networks around the world either in multi user group conferences or in one to one private discussions. It has a clean practical interface that is highly configurable and supports features such as buddy lists file transfers multi server connections SSL encryption proxy support UTF 8 display customizable sounds spoken messages tray notifications message logging and more.
mIRC also has a powerful scripting language that can be used both to automate mIRC and to create applications that perform a wide range of functions from network communications to playing games.
mIRC 7.1 has been released! (July 30th 2010)
This is the first stable release of the new Unicode version of mIRC.
The project to convert mIRC to Unicode has taken almost two years of development and testing and has required tens of thousands of changes to 150 000+ lines of source code. This has been the most complex and time consuming update to mIRC since it was created in 1995 when it started out as a non Unicode 16 bit Windows 3.1 application.
Many areas of mIRC have had to be updated or re written from file handling to text processing from display to memory allocation from server communications to file transfers.
mIRC should now be faster more stable and more compatible with the latest versions of Windows and should be able to better handle the display and input of a variety of languages.
In addition to being converted to Unicode there are a few other notable changes:
Improved Windows 7 compatibility
More reliable INI file handling
Faster text display/scrolling
Speech support
Improved interface design for a number of features
Automatic text color correction
Menubar ALT key show/hide feature
Support for italic text and other font styles
Optimized SSL routines
Status window SSL connection icon
IPv6 support
Improved portable support
Persistent channel history
Digitally signed executables
Automatic splitting of long channel/private messages
Full screen display with F11 function key
UPnP support
Many bug fixes
And more .
13/10/2010 mIRC v7.14
Changes:
1.Fixed mouse drop menu event bug.
2.Fixed $isutf() bug.
3.Fixed /scon recursion gpf bug.
4.Changed /filter to halt only if an alias call returns an error.
5.Fixed /hadd u bug.
6.Optimized text display caching.
7.Changed file handling to flush files to disk immediately.
Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
More Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
4dobe Products Free Full Download
link : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh

WARNING FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY!!!
ONCE AGAIN FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSE ONLY!!!
mIRC v7.14
mIRC is a popular Internet Relay Chat client used by millions of people and thousands of organizations to communicate share play and work with each other on IRC networks around the world. Serving the Internet community for over a decade mIRC has evolved into a powerful reliable and fun piece of technology.
Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
More Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
4dobe Products Free Full Download
link : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
mIRC is a full featured Internet Relay Chat client for Windows that can be used to communicate share play or work with others on IRC networks around the world either in multi user group conferences or in one to one private discussions. It has a clean practical interface that is highly configurable and supports features such as buddy lists file transfers multi server connections SSL encryption proxy support UTF 8 display customizable sounds spoken messages tray notifications message logging and more.
mIRC also has a powerful scripting language that can be used both to automate mIRC and to create applications that perform a wide range of functions from network communications to playing games.
mIRC 7.1 has been released! (July 30th 2010)
This is the first stable release of the new Unicode version of mIRC.
The project to convert mIRC to Unicode has taken almost two years of development and testing and has required tens of thousands of changes to 150 000+ lines of source code. This has been the most complex and time consuming update to mIRC since it was created in 1995 when it started out as a non Unicode 16 bit Windows 3.1 application.
Many areas of mIRC have had to be updated or re written from file handling to text processing from display to memory allocation from server communications to file transfers.
mIRC should now be faster more stable and more compatible with the latest versions of Windows and should be able to better handle the display and input of a variety of languages.
In addition to being converted to Unicode there are a few other notable changes:
Improved Windows 7 compatibility
More reliable INI file handling
Faster text display/scrolling
Speech support
Improved interface design for a number of features
Automatic text color correction
Menubar ALT key show/hide feature
Support for italic text and other font styles
Optimized SSL routines
Status window SSL connection icon
IPv6 support
Improved portable support
Persistent channel history
Digitally signed executables
Automatic splitting of long channel/private messages
Full screen display with F11 function key
UPnP support
Many bug fixes
And more .
13/10/2010 mIRC v7.14
Changes:
1.Fixed mouse drop menu event bug.
2.Fixed $isutf() bug.
3.Fixed /scon recursion gpf bug.
4.Changed /filter to halt only if an alias call returns an error.
5.Fixed /hadd u bug.
6.Optimized text display caching.
7.Changed file handling to flush files to disk immediately.
Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
More Free Full Download : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh
4dobe Products Free Full Download
link : http://www.mediafire.com/download/bj2y5f2vy4g9sbh

IRC is Not Dead, Facebook Messenger is!
Internet Relay Chat
[WISHLIST]
http://amzn.com/w/2XN0J5WZ28BZB
[AMAZON AFFILIATE LINK]
http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&linkCode=ur2&tag=futuretechide-20
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[WEBSITES]
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http://cyberteksyndicate.com
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http://newsingeneral.com
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http://futuretechideas.com
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*Random Channel*
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'Royalty Free Music by http://audiomicro.com/royalty-free-mu...
'Sound Effects by http://audiomicro.com/sound-effects'
Dear Youtube,
I, Matthew Huffaker (http://www.youtube.com/user/teknoaxe), Give (MrJasrene1) permission to use my original content/music commercially. Any YouTube user may monetize videos that contain my music, which is featured on my website and YouTube Channel Page.
Internet Relay Chat (IRC) is an application layer protocol that facilitates transfer of messages in the form of text. The chat process works on a client/server model of networking. IRC clients are computer programs that a user can install on their system. These clients are able to communicate with chat servers to transfer messages to other clients. It is mainly designed for group communication in discussion forums, called channels but also allows one-to-one communication via private message as well as chat and data transfer,including file sharing.
IRC is an open protocol that uses TCP and, optionally, TLS. An IRC server can connect to other IRC servers to expand the IRC network. Users access IRC networks by connecting a client to a server.[There are many client implementations, such as mIRC, HexChat and irssi, and server implementations, e.g. the original IRCd. Most IRC servers do not require users to register an account but a user will have to set a nickname before being connected.
IRC was originally a plain text protocol (although later extended), which on request was assigned port 194/TCP by IANA. However, the de facto standard has always been to run IRC on 6667/TCP and nearby port numbers (for example TCP ports 6660–6669, 7000 to avoid having to run the IRCd software with root privileges.
The protocol specified that characters were 8-bit but did not specify the character encoding the text was supposed to use. This can cause problems when users using different clients and/or different platforms want to converse.
All client-to-server IRC protocols in use today are descended from the protocol implemented in the irc2.4.0 version of the IRC2 server, and documented in RFC 1459. Since RFC 1459 was published, the new features in the irc2.10 implementation led to the publication of several revised protocol documents (RFC 2810, RFC 2811, RFC 2812 and RFC 2813); however, these protocol changes have not been widely adopted among other implementations.
Although many specifications on the IRC protocol have been published, there is no official specification, as the protocol remains dynamic. Virtually no clients and very few servers rely strictly on the above RFCs as a reference.
Microsoft made an extension for IRC in 1998 via the proprietary IRCX. They later stopped distributing software supporting IRCX, instead developing the proprietary MSNP.
The standard structure of a network of IRC servers is a tree. Messages are routed along only necessary branches of the tree but network state is sent to every server and there is generally a high degree of implicit trust between servers. This architecture has a number of problems. A misbehaving or malicious server can cause major damage to the network and any changes in structure, whether intentional or a result of conditions on the underlyin

IRC is Not Dead, Facebook Messenger is!
Internet Relay Chat
[WISHLIST]
http://amzn.com/w/2XN0J5WZ28BZB
[AMAZON AFFILIATE LINK]
http://www.amazon.com/?_encoding=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&linkCode=ur2&tag=futuretechide-20
[SOCIAL]
*Twitter For TDG*
http://twitter.com/TheDiabeticGeek
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http://facebook.com/diabeticgeek
*Twitch*
www.twitch.tv/futuretechideas
*Instagram*
http://instagram.com/jasongoyette
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http://twitter.com/futuretechideas
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http://facebook.com/cyberteksyndicate
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http://facebook.com/newsingeneral
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[WEBSITES]
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http://newsingeneral.com
*FutureTechIdeas*
http://futuretechideas.com
*BraeHawkTech*
http://braehawktech.com
*FTI Tech Blog*
http://ftimedia.blogspot.com
*Conspiracy and Paranormal Blog*
http://fticonspiracies.blogspot.com
*Check out My Merchandise*
http://futuretechideas.spreadshirt.com
*VloggingTipsandTricks Blog*
http://vloggingtipsandtricks.wordpress.com
[YOUTUBE CHANNELS]
*NewsInGeneral Channel*
http://youtube.com/TheFutureTechIdeas
*Tech Channel*
http://youtube.com/FutureTekIdeas
*Random Channel*
http://youtube.com/TheDiabeticGeek
'Royalty Free Music by http://audiomicro.com/royalty-free-mu...
'Sound Effects by http://audiomicro.com/sound-effects'
Dear Youtube,
I, Matthew Huffaker (http://www.youtube.com/user/teknoaxe), Give (MrJasrene1) permission to use my original content/music commercially. Any YouTube user may monetize videos that contain my music, which is featured on my website and YouTube Channel Page.
Internet Relay Chat (IRC) is an application layer protocol that facilitates transfer of messages in the form of text. The chat process works on a client/server model of networking. IRC clients are computer programs that a user can install on their system. These clients are able to communicate with chat servers to transfer messages to other clients. It is mainly designed for group communication in discussion forums, called channels but also allows one-to-one communication via private message as well as chat and data transfer,including file sharing.
IRC is an open protocol that uses TCP and, optionally, TLS. An IRC server can connect to other IRC servers to expand the IRC network. Users access IRC networks by connecting a client to a server.[There are many client implementations, such as mIRC, HexChat and irssi, and server implementations, e.g. the original IRCd. Most IRC servers do not require users to register an account but a user will have to set a nickname before being connected.
IRC was originally a plain text protocol (although later extended), which on request was assigned port 194/TCP by IANA. However, the de facto standard has always been to run IRC on 6667/TCP and nearby port numbers (for example TCP ports 6660–6669, 7000 to avoid having to run the IRCd software with root privileges.
The protocol specified that characters were 8-bit but did not specify the character encoding the text was supposed to use. This can cause problems when users using different clients and/or different platforms want to converse.
All client-to-server IRC protocols in use today are descended from the protocol implemented in the irc2.4.0 version of the IRC2 server, and documented in RFC 1459. Since RFC 1459 was published, the new features in the irc2.10 implementation led to the publication of several revised protocol documents (RFC 2810, RFC 2811, RFC 2812 and RFC 2813); however, these protocol changes have not been widely adopted among other implementations.
Although many specifications on the IRC protocol have been published, there is no official specification, as the protocol remains dynamic. Virtually no clients and very few servers rely strictly on the above RFCs as a reference.
Microsoft made an extension for IRC in 1998 via the proprietary IRCX. They later stopped distributing software supporting IRCX, instead developing the proprietary MSNP.
The standard structure of a network of IRC servers is a tree. Messages are routed along only necessary branches of the tree but network state is sent to every server and there is generally a high degree of implicit trust between servers. This architecture has a number of problems. A misbehaving or malicious server can cause major damage to the network and any changes in structure, whether intentional or a result of conditions on the underlyin

How to Herd Cats! Here’s Ten Tools to Keep Your Team on The Same Page. I’m John P. Geek Beat starts NOW!
Today we’re focusing on a common problem for tech and start-up geeks: namely people working on the same project from different locations. How do you keep em on track and on task? Here are ten tools that should do the trick:
Let’s start with an obvious choice:
Google Apps for Work. For $5 a person each month (or $50 for the year) you get an entire suite of tools that literally keeps your people and projects in sync through the cloud: We’re talking Gmail, Google Calendar, Docs, Sheets, Forms and Slides - to name a few (and at Geekbeat we pretty much use them all every day).
For less than four dollars a user per month businesses can organize shared attachments via Trello (which is compatible with Google Apps as well as Dropbox, Box, and One Drive). We use Trello to share and assign scripts and other projects among the Geekbeat team. It’s great for dividing up a project into “cards” which you can assign to individuals or groups .There’s a free version of Trello available if you’d like to try before you buy.
Dropbox has been out front of the “cloud” craze for some time now. Start with a free account with 2 gigs of storage, “earn” additional gigs by referring friends --- or step up to unlimited storage for $15 per user per month- and share pretty much anything with anyone anywhere.
If there is a “Swiss Army Knife” for remote teams it’s “Slack” which integrates with 75 different services - including all of those we’ve covered so far. “Slack” organizes everything into channels, sort of like good old Internet Relay Chat, and is archivable and searchable. Slack is a freemium service with limits on the number of integrated services on the free version. $7 per user per month gets you unlimited integrations and other goodies.
By the way, we set up a Geek Beat Slack Chat, and you can gain instant access if you head over to GeekBeat.TV/slack to sign in and join the mahem. Most of the Geek Beat team is in there all day with the community. So that is either a feature, or a drawback. You decide.
For face-to-face conversations you could fire up Google Hangouts with your Google Apps suite, OR you could use Sqwiggle to literally get a webcam snapshot of who’s at their keyboard at anytime. The free version of Sqwiggle allows 1on1 chats, and for $9 per user per month up to ten team members can teleconference at once.
Evernote is a terrific hub for teams to collaborate and launch products with shared “notebooks.” There’s a free “basic” service and a business-class version for $10 per user per month. I personally use Evernote for just about everything. To Do lists, recipes, locations of where I buried the…
For keeping everyone on the same page -- and up to date on what everyone on the team has accomplished each day, try “IDoneThis.com” This web service will email a reminder to every team member to reply with what they did that day and the next day will send out a digest of completed tasks. “IDoneThis” offers a free 30 day trial --after that it costs $5 per team member per month.
For the road warriors on your team there’s “workfrom” which can recommend coffee shops and other Wi-Fi equipped work-friendly locations in whatever city you happen to be in.
As great as these tools are, every now and then it’s a good idea to get everyone together in the same place - and for that there’s “Flock.” -Enter the number of people you have in each city and flock figures out the best place to meet, complete with travel and housing costs.
Finally, if you DO use all these tools it’s going to be necessary to share some passwords for some of these services among your team and for that there’s “Meldium.” This web-based password and permissions manager is free to try for two weeks - after that they have plans beginning at $24 per month for 20 users.
So, there you have it: Geekbeat’s top ten list of services to keep teams working remotely and virtually on the same page. You’ll find links to all of these @ GeekBeat.TV. -Do you have some favorites we didn’t cover? Share them with us (as well as your fellow Geeks) in the comment section of this episode.
See more tech news, tips, and reviews at http://GeekBeat.TV
Connect with Geek Beat:
web: http://www.GeekBeat.TV
facebook: http://www.facebook.com/GeekBeatTV
instagram: http://instagram.com/GeekBeatTV
twitter: https://twitter.com/GeekBeatTV
Geek Beat is one of the world’s most recognizable technology news brands, delivering daily tech news, tips, and reviews. Our mission, quite simply, is to enlighten, educate, and entertain.

How to Herd Cats! Here’s Ten Tools to Keep Your Team on The Same Page. I’m John P. Geek Beat starts NOW!
Today we’re focusing on a common problem for tech and start-up geeks: namely people working on the same project from different locations. How do you keep em on track and on task? Here are ten tools that should do the trick:
Let’s start with an obvious choice:
Google Apps for Work. For $5 a person each month (or $50 for the year) you get an entire suite of tools that literally keeps your people and projects in sync through the cloud: We’re talking Gmail, Google Calendar, Docs, Sheets, Forms and Slides - to name a few (and at Geekbeat we pretty much use them all every day).
For less than four dollars a user per month businesses can organize shared attachments via Trello (which is compatible with Google Apps as well as Dropbox, Box, and One Drive). We use Trello to share and assign scripts and other projects among the Geekbeat team. It’s great for dividing up a project into “cards” which you can assign to individuals or groups .There’s a free version of Trello available if you’d like to try before you buy.
Dropbox has been out front of the “cloud” craze for some time now. Start with a free account with 2 gigs of storage, “earn” additional gigs by referring friends --- or step up to unlimited storage for $15 per user per month- and share pretty much anything with anyone anywhere.
If there is a “Swiss Army Knife” for remote teams it’s “Slack” which integrates with 75 different services - including all of those we’ve covered so far. “Slack” organizes everything into channels, sort of like good old Internet Relay Chat, and is archivable and searchable. Slack is a freemium service with limits on the number of integrated services on the free version. $7 per user per month gets you unlimited integrations and other goodies.
By the way, we set up a Geek Beat Slack Chat, and you can gain instant access if you head over to GeekBeat.TV/slack to sign in and join the mahem. Most of the Geek Beat team is in there all day with the community. So that is either a feature, or a drawback. You decide.
For face-to-face conversations you could fire up Google Hangouts with your Google Apps suite, OR you could use Sqwiggle to literally get a webcam snapshot of who’s at their keyboard at anytime. The free version of Sqwiggle allows 1on1 chats, and for $9 per user per month up to ten team members can teleconference at once.
Evernote is a terrific hub for teams to collaborate and launch products with shared “notebooks.” There’s a free “basic” service and a business-class version for $10 per user per month. I personally use Evernote for just about everything. To Do lists, recipes, locations of where I buried the…
For keeping everyone on the same page -- and up to date on what everyone on the team has accomplished each day, try “IDoneThis.com” This web service will email a reminder to every team member to reply with what they did that day and the next day will send out a digest of completed tasks. “IDoneThis” offers a free 30 day trial --after that it costs $5 per team member per month.
For the road warriors on your team there’s “workfrom” which can recommend coffee shops and other Wi-Fi equipped work-friendly locations in whatever city you happen to be in.
As great as these tools are, every now and then it’s a good idea to get everyone together in the same place - and for that there’s “Flock.” -Enter the number of people you have in each city and flock figures out the best place to meet, complete with travel and housing costs.
Finally, if you DO use all these tools it’s going to be necessary to share some passwords for some of these services among your team and for that there’s “Meldium.” This web-based password and permissions manager is free to try for two weeks - after that they have plans beginning at $24 per month for 20 users.
So, there you have it: Geekbeat’s top ten list of services to keep teams working remotely and virtually on the same page. You’ll find links to all of these @ GeekBeat.TV. -Do you have some favorites we didn’t cover? Share them with us (as well as your fellow Geeks) in the comment section of this episode.
See more tech news, tips, and reviews at http://GeekBeat.TV
Connect with Geek Beat:
web: http://www.GeekBeat.TV
facebook: http://www.facebook.com/GeekBeatTV
instagram: http://instagram.com/GeekBeatTV
twitter: https://twitter.com/GeekBeatTV
Geek Beat is one of the world’s most recognizable technology news brands, delivering daily tech news, tips, and reviews. Our mission, quite simply, is to enlighten, educate, and entertain.

A botnet is a collection of Internet-connected programs communicating with other similar programs in order to perform tasks. This can be as mundane as keeping control of an Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel, or it could be used to send spam email or participate in distributed denial-of-service attacks. The word botnet is a combination of the words robot and network. The term is usually used with a negative or malicious connotation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botnet
sleash TheSleash BoracTuba EX TheSleash on Xbox Live
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheSleash
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/100006845700053
The next link could provide one with tips on how to manage being IP booted, DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attacked.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uvwz3SpzOdk&list=UUuJgDLAYYXg6ayD35zAZ5Fg&feature=youtu.be
The link that follows is videos from my other channel.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5U5ONN3TK0s&list=UU1062cSrwXISE70K6qNeY2w&feature=youtu.be
http://cyber-criminals.org/forum/

A botnet is a collection of Internet-connected programs communicating with other similar programs in order to perform tasks. This can be as mundane as keeping control of an Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channel, or it could be used to send spam email or participate in distributed denial-of-service attacks. The word botnet is a combination of the words robot and network. The term is usually used with a negative or malicious connotation.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Botnet
sleash TheSleash BoracTuba EX TheSleash on Xbox Live
Subscribe: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=TheSleash
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/100006845700053
The next link could provide one with tips on how to manage being IP booted, DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attacked.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uvwz3SpzOdk&list=UUuJgDLAYYXg6ayD35zAZ5Fg&feature=youtu.be
The link that follows is videos from my other channel.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5U5ONN3TK0s&list=UU1062cSrwXISE70K6qNeY2w&feature=youtu.be
http://cyber-criminals.org/forum/

Hey, thanks for watching! If you enjoyed the video, give it a like! While you're at it, leave some feedback in the comments section. I always appreciate it.
Terms you may want to know:
IRC - Internet Relay Chat. Internet Relay Chat is a simple text messaging protocol which allows for clients to interact with other clients through a chat server. IRC was mainly designed for group communication across different channels (channels can be thought of as "chat rooms" or "forums"). However, IRC can also be used for private communication between two clients.
IRC Botnet - This refers to a network of bots (or zombies) controlled through the usage of the IRC protocol. The IRC protocol provides a simple and effective interface to command bots in groups, or individually.
Mbps - Megabits per second. This is a unit of data transfer in computer systems. The skid in the video was attempting to use this term in order to refer to the rate at which he'd be sending data to my network during a DoS attack. However, he didn't know what the actual term was nor did he know what it means.

published:19 Nov 2014

views:74

1:15

How to Use IRC Scripts

Scripts are very useful when chatting in IRC, but definitely not something that is common ...

Ronda Rousey flipped her script but kept the timing the same Saturday night. Using her newly developed punching power instead of her famed armbar, Rousey knocked out challenger Bethe Correia 34 seconds into their Ultimate Fighting Championship bantamweight title bout in Brazil. Rousey (12-0) has now won 11 of her 12 fights in the first round, and she has ended her last four in 34 seconds, 14 seconds, 16 seconds and 66 seconds ... RELATED ... ....

Uncertainty surrounded the fate of another lion from Zimbabwe’s Hwange National Park Saturday after a conservation group reported that Jericho, brother of the lion slain by American dentist Walter Palmer, had also been killed ... “We are absolutely heart broken. We will update you all as soon as we have more details,” the statement added ... Hwange park authorities were unavailable for confirmation ... AFP. ....

PARIS. Ending the crisis that has seen thousands of attempts by migrants to reach England from Calais in recent weeks is a "top priority", the interior ministers of France and Britain wrote in a joint statement Sunday ... "Tackling this situation is the top priority for the UK and French governments ... At least 10 migrants have died attempting the dangerous journey since June ... "Our border is secure, and there is no easy way into the UK." ... ....

Over 60 hackers arrested in joint operation between FBI, NCA, Europol and other law enforcement agencies in global crackdown on cybercrime black market. @SamuelGibbs ...Related. The world's first hack. the telegraph and the invention of privacy ... An internetrelaychat server was set up, which was then used by hacking group Lizard Squad, who were responsible for a variety of cyberattacks on Sony, Microsoft, Taylor Swift and others ... ....

Notorious cybercrime forum Darkode, frequented by Lizard Squad and other hacking groups, has been taken offline in a coordinated international law enforcement clampdown across 20 countries ...Police in Scotland also raided an address in Paisley ... An internetrelaychat server was set up, which was then used by hacking group Lizard Squad, who were responsible for a variety of cyberattacks on Sony, Microsoft, Taylor Swift and others ... ....

It's diminished by detractors and puffed up by ardent devotees ...The ManyFaces of Anonymous." ... ProfessorColeman, considered the leading expert on Anonymous, says the data reveals "a parallel world, or really worlds, that live on Facebook" instead of other social media sites such as Twitter and InternetRelayChat services ... Only few mainstream media can match the movement’s enormous internet infrastructure."....

Shortly after I joined the Sonoma CountyBBS scene, a boyfriend showed me InternetRelayChat, a precursor to today's instant-messaging systems. On IRC, you could join specific channels where like-minded users hung out and chatted about goth culture or their favorite programming languages ...Once they'd identified the users they thought were female (my online name was obviously feminine), they'd chat us up....

She conducted a small study to determine whether there are trends in username choice, and whether the way we choose usernames has changed since Internet’s nascent days ... She compared this with the number of characters in usernames from InternetRelayChat logs she's saved from 1999 -- names on that site were an average of 6.6 characters....

Brandenburg’s genius lay in shrinking sound files down so that they could easily be sent over the internet, back when most files were huge and modems still dialled up ... Very quickly I was in these internetrelaychat channels, which were raucous and full of awful behaviour, but they also had this new kind of file called an MP3 that I had never heard of before....

InternetRelayChat in the mid- to late 90s, lurking for a little while was practically a requirement. The newsgroups I participated in recommended that newbies hang out for at least a few days and ... ....

That breakthrough enabled pirates like Glover to smuggle CDs from the production floor, rip and share them to the InternetRelayChat “dark rooms” of cyberspace ... Not all business people were as clueless as those in the music industry when it came to understanding—and manipulating—the shattering changes brought by the Internet ... But as with Beanie Babies, what the Internet took away, it also gave....

Unlike the hundreds of other forums and shops selling stolen payment card data in the digital underworld, Rescator was different ... But what is evident is that they pose a growing threat to governments, businesses, and average Internet users ... All you need is an Internet connection ... Holt said ... Forum members typically use e-mail, private Twitter accounts, InternetRelayChat, and services such as Jabber to communicate and transact business....

Archived group and individual chat logs, which can be easily referenced at a later point Seamless collaboration with team members from ...Chat rooms and listservs work particularly well at company, department, and team levels ... Slack, HipChat and other InternetRelayChat (IRC) services improve peer-to-peer communications—or horizontal communications....

Mostly young Internet agitators and pranksters in the US would set the agenda for the collective, and wannabes around the world would follow ... “It was the largest op I have seen in over a year, with around 400-500 participants on the English-speaking [InternetRelayChat],” wrote Gabriella Coleman, author of the new book, “Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy....